\name{webstats}
\alias{webstats}
\docType{data}
\title{Web Statistics}
\description{
This data set is a collection of usage statistics from a small website over the course of approximately eight months.  For each day, the number of visits, pages, hits, and bandwidth used were recorded.
}
\usage{data(webstats)}
\format{
  A data frame with 239 observations on the following 5 variables.
  \describe{
    \item{\code{Visits}}{a numeric vector}
    \item{\code{Pages}}{a numeric vector}
    \item{\code{Hits}}{a numeric vector}
    \item{\code{Day}}{a Date}
    \item{\code{Bandwidth}}{a character vector}
  }
}
\details{
Because of how they are calculated, we can say that \code{Visits} <= \code{Pages} <= \code{Hits}.

\code{Hits}: A ``hit'' counts the number of file requests from the server---these tend to be large and not necessarily reflective of number or regularity of visitors.

\code{Pages}: A ``page'' is defined as a request to view a page file (e.g., .html, .aspx, etc.).  A page view can involve multiple ``hits''.

\code{Visits}: A ``visit'' can involve multiple page views (which can themselves involve multiple hits) from the same client.  The same client can have multiple visits in a day, but there must be at least 30 minutes between visits (i.e., viewing a page, going to another website and then returning within 30 minutes is still counted as a single visit).
}
\source{
The package author's personal website: http://joshuawiley.com/.
}
\examples{
data(webstats)
str(webstats)
}
\keyword{datasets}
